Edward T. Cone
And His Ideas About How We Hear Music
by Paul Geraci
Edward T. Cone's ideas on music perception cause people to re-examine how they
listen to music. He presents no objective theories that can be proven in a concrete sense
and he often leaves the reader with more questions than answers. But his ideas cause one
- or even force one - into thinking about the parameters and boundaries of music and how
it will ultimately be perceived. Therein lies his greatest strength as a music theorist: he
makes us think! The main ideas that will be discussed throughout this endeavor are
Cone's concept of musical frames and the presence (or absence) of the composer's voice.
Because this paper is meant to explore the timelessness of Cone's theories, a considerable
portion will be dedicated to applying Cone's questions to new examples from a variety of
different time periods and genres.
Shhh! It's about to start.
Close your eyes. You are there; in the concert hall. The audience is waiting
restlessly as they have gathered to hear the famous Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 4. The
strings tune up and you hear the familiar sounds of open fourths and fifths. Then a hush
falls over the crowd. Maestro Whatshisface enters the stage and assumes the podium
with enthusiastic applause from the audience. He raises the baton and looks directly at
the horns. An uncomfortable silence rings in your ears and you have a lump in your
2
throat as the anticipation is eating at your gut. Perhaps you can ever hear your own heart
beat. There goes the prep beat….The downbeat…. And the horns burst forth with the
fate motive! Wow, talk about tension and release!
One of Cone's principles about music perception is to challenge us by simply
asking "When does music begin?". The above example illustrates many sounds and
silences that occur prior to the "performance" that are not in the score. Can we safely say
that this symphony begins on that first downbeat and that all of those emotional moments
that came before are not part of it? Or that the energy and power cast into the conductor's
silent prep beat are not part of the music? 1
Cone reminds us that music is a temporal art. That is to say that it occurs
throughout a specified or unspecified period or periods in time.2 Therefore we often feel
a need to define this period of time during which we are experiencing music (or cinema,
theatre, or dance). This is accomplished by imposing a frame around that time period, a
powerful frame that often takes the semblance of silence. It is this effect, this lack of
sound, that heralds the arrival of the first note. It is a symbol to listeners as well as
performers that we are about to begin… Or have we already begun?
Let us imagine this concept in something less temporal such as a painting or
photograph. The artwork is rarely held up on the wall by Scotch tape and thumb tacks.
1 Edward T.Cone, Musical Form and Musical Performance (New York: W. W. Norton and Co.
1968), 11-12.
2 ibid. 15-16
3
It has a frame, - a beautiful wooden frame engraved with gold that provides the picture
with boundaries and makes it come alive within that given space. The matting is such
that it highlights both the gold frame and dark colors of the picture. Is the frame part of
the art? Of course the artist who conceived the picture did not build its frame, and that
frame is interchangeable with any other. But somehow the picture wants to expand
beyond itself and fill out its frame. Perhaps we are more unsure of ourselves than when
we started. Good. At least we begin to think. Now let us look at some other examples.
Since we now have the possibility of having a silent frame around music,
perhaps a frame within a frame can exist or the frame itself can be a musical event. Take
Beethoven's Symphony no. 3 "Eroica" for example. Where does the music start? Is it the
main theme or the two sharp orchestra hits preceding it? Are these hits part of the music
or Beethoven's attention getting gesture screaming "HEY!!! Listen up! I've got
something to say!" Beethoven's Symphony no. 5 in C minor is another example. Does
the music start on beat one, which is a tutti eighth rest, or on the "and" of one?3 Some
conductors like to think of the first bar as the fourth in a silent phrase, which is the
anacrusis to the downbeat of measure two. By mentally counting three blank bars, one
places the strength of the downbeat of bar 2 on a strong bar, in which case there are
several places where one could argue the music actually starts.
But let's leave the symphony. Out of the balcony box seats, into the fancy
elevator, down to the red carpeted lobby. BUT WAIT! Did you miss it? The Girl from
3 ibid. 18
4
Ipanema was playing on the Muzak system in the elevator. When did it start? When did
it end? Both Satie and Hindemith characterized this as music for use, which means it has
a functional or utilitarian value. Since this music has a use (to relax the nerves with
tranquil background tones in what some might consider a claustrophobic environment)
does it start when A) The janitor turns it on in the morning, B) We can hear it, C) When
we enter the chamber and allow the music to do its assigned task, or D) When the song
changes? Before you answer this difficult question, why don't you sleep on it?
Perhaps you were enjoying that nice doze when the clock radio struck 7am and
started blaring the chorus of Aerosmith's Dream On. Almost instantly your hand
smashes down the snooze button. Before you go back for your five more minutes of rest
ask yourself this. You just heard 6 seconds of a song. Did you hear the beginning and
ending of the piece? What was the goal of the music? Can the goal of music be different
under different circumstances? If it can, can the start and end of the composition vary as
well? By now that clock radio has gone off again and this time it's playing Brittany
Spears - So do us all a favor and smash the damn thing!
When will this be over?
Now that we are at the end of beginnings we can proceed to the beginning of the
ends. Just as the start of a piece may be ambiguous, so the precise location of the piece's
ending. I assume you have anticipated the next line of questions. Does it end with the
last note? When we leave the concert hall? (Perhaps you are rude and leave early) With
5
the final reverberations and reflections in the hall? The frame of silence? The applause?
Perhaps if it is functional music it is completed when it has finished its task. Again, Cone
gives us difficult choices. Now I will compound the problem with technology.
You've finally gotten out of bed and make it in to the music studio. You've laid
down some tracks and are ready to do a final mix. The ending however, is a typical
1980s pop song fade out where the master faders are smoothly reduced to an inaudible
level. A factor to remember is that the fade occurs over repeated material and the song
has really said what has needed to be said. But keep in mind there is still 30 seconds of
music left on the tape, although it exists below the threshold of hearing. So then the
question is; when does the song end? Perhaps it is an imaginary end or maybe it is meant
to be infinite? Does it end at the moment of attenuation or at the end of the fade? I
suppose the Schenkerian view would be that it will eventually settle on a tonic chord
preceded by a dominant whether it is audible or not. Although you may not have an
answer to this dilemma yet, let's go test these new tracks over at the local dance club and
maybe we'll find some answers.
You slip the DJ twenty bucks and your CD and watch to see people's reactions.
You notice some people going on to the dance floor and some coming off and others stay
where they are. The DJ compliments you saying "Man! People can really dance to this
groove!" Then you realize you have composed functional music and its purpose is for
people to dance to it. Then you ask yourself "Does the music end when someone leaves
the dance floor?" What about at the other points we mentioned before? Let's listen a bit
6
longer as we are nearing the end of the song. Maybe people's actions will determine
where the end really is and you can get on with your life without asking yourself any
more philosophical questions.
As the music reaches the fade out the DJ creates a cross-fade into the next tune.
People have not even noticed the end. With the cross fade they did not even hear it.
Some keep dancing, others quit. It's as if they didn't even care. Here we must take a
departure back to older dance forms such as minuets, courantes, waltzes, and pavannes.
Courtly dance music involved many steps and needed time between songs for participants
to prepare for a definite beginning. Only then would they begin to dance. Music at a
modern dance club plays continuously allowing participants to join in or exit as they
please, yet Cone might argue that the music only truly "begins" when one begins dancing.
Consequently the music ends once the function of dancing has ceased.
Cone's thoughts seem akin to the argument "If a tree falls in the woods…" This
may be true and we can ponder it for many hours. But is it important? My old music
teacher told me people always remember two things: the beginning and the end. It would
be nice if we knew which was which. Perhaps then, it is something worthy of thought,
especially if the composer, analyst, or listener value the beginning and the end of a work.
Still confused? Maybe Mr. Cone can provide a clearer picture.
7
Help! I've Been Framed!
Since music is intangible and exists throughout a period of time, it is the task of
the composer to put a limitation (or lack thereof) on that period or as Cone refers to it: a
musical frame. But we have already gone over this concept. What else can it mean?
Let's start with possibly the most controversial piece of all time: John Cage's 4'33".
While some consider this work merely to be silence or the absence of music,
others regard it as a serious musical composition. But if Cone's ideas of musical frames
are taken into account we can see that the composer has done some serious planning.
The piece is divided into three movements; all with a specified time frame. The three
minutes together total 4 minutes and 33 seconds. So in essence, what Cage has done is
created a sophisticated overlapping series of frames to capture a specific amount of time.
Anything that invades those frames becomes the music. When it occurs within the frame
determines what movement it happens in. Well, a picture says a thousand words…
8
Still Confused? Maybe Even… Vexed?
Another example would be Satie's Vexations, which is a work that repeats itself
an ungodly number of times. Under normal circumstances one would not listen or even
perform this work in its entirety, although it has been done as marathon relay concerts
have been run. In fact, because of its length, it does not fit onto standard recordable
media. Where then does it begin? Where does it end? In a marathon concert version
where several pianists take turns audience members frequently enter and exit at their own
discretion. Therefore, Cone would take the stance that while they are audience members
they install a frame around the music they experience. It might look like this.
Vexations
Picture This!
OK so we have an understanding of how frames work but do they really affect our
perception of a musical work? Absolutely! Perhaps you are familiar with the tune
America (My country tis of thee…). Let's put this fabulous patriotic work of art on
display. The only dilemma now is how to frame it. Wait! Yes, I realize that it
composer's job to install a temporal frame but the type of frame we (the listener) employ
9
will alter our musical perception. Step back and "view" this musical picture. What
images are conjured fourth? Perhaps something like this.
America
What a clear picture. How could we ever imagine anything else? Well let's put a
new frame on it. Or more accurately, let's put the older original frame on it. Perhaps our
perception of the same music will be altered.
God Save the Queen
Same music different frame. Cone's theory is that our framing of a piece will
alter our perception of it. By looking at this music within the frame of American society
10
we see a distinct picture. On the other hand, someone with a British background will see
something entirely different. It seems that these musical frames function like glasses or a
lens, which, colors the way we look at art. What's more, this lens can be crafted by social
and cultural factors.4
Claus Cluver cites an example by Ronald Gross who takes an otherwise mundane
obituary and re-frames it into what some might call "art". This is accomplished by first
giving the "art" a title. In this case Gross calls his work The Elegiac Verses. Second, he
makes it "look" like a poem with the left margin justified. Does this new frame make this
poetry? Art? If it were read by William Shatner or James Earl Jones would it become
even more poetic? Again we see that the sometimes the content is defined by the frame.5
Elegiac Verses
4 Edward T. Cone, The Composer's Voice (Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1974),
51-52.
5 Claus Cluver, "Musical Train Rides in the Classroom." Indiana Theory Review 12: 165-166.
Abraham Brodsky of 1671 North
Avenue, founder and president
of the Regal Electric Sup-
ply Company in Newark for
40 years, died yesterday at the
Elizabeth General Hospital. He
Was 77 years old. He retired
In 1961.
11
A Fantastique Idea
Perhaps you are not convinced by either Cone's or Gross's example. The addition
of text does tend to easily redefine the meaning of the music or art. Let's examine
another famous work of art: the Symphonie Fantastique, by Hector Berlioz. Could one
somehow put this into a new frame while keeping the same music and storyline? Paul
Igance did just that by altering the title and using his name as the author in place of
Berlioz. Ignace states:
When I was first asked to compose a piece for orchestra I
had no idea what they wanted, except an experience of some kind…
when I discovered that the concert preceding the night of my
premiere included Berlioz's Symphony Fantastique, I made up my
mind. I insisted that my work be unrehearsed… Imagine the shock
when the conductor and players opened the music to find the work
they had performed the night before… But they performed it, much
to the anger and horror of the audience and reviewers. They were
angry of course, not at the sounds but at my plagiarism but few
realized that they listened to the sounds in an entirely new way-
something very good, very creative in my way of thinking….6
The point is that, much like Cone's example of viewing (or in our case hearing) an
identical work with a different frame can result in different possible perceptions of the
work. Ignace proves this point in spades by creating an instant hatred and hostile
environment. Think about it. Ignace's audience now hears the first movement, Passions,
with its lush beautiful sounds and washes of color, as a terrible travesty! Injustice!
6 David Cope, New Directions in Music, 7
th ed (Prospect Heights, Illinois: Waveland Press, 2001),
103-104.
12
Robbery, plagiarism, theft, or the destruction of one of the world's beloved treasures!
And so we must ask ourselves; what piece are we listening to? Perhaps they ARE two
separate compositions.
Help! I've lost my Voice!
Another one of Edward Cone's thought provoking insights is that of the
composer's voice. He believes, as many do, that music is a language. It communicates,
makes statements, conveys messages, emotions, has its own syntax, rhetoric, and
semantics. However, one question is never asked: If music is a language, then WHO is
speaking?7
7 Edward T. Cone, The Composer's Voice (Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1974), 1.
13
What? That's an easy one you say. The composer speaks? Ah, but Mr. Cone
would beg to differ. He reminds us of three literary models: the lyric, dramatic, and
narrative. In the lyric the author uses their own voice; in the drama it is through the voice
of character personas; in the narrative it is a combination of both. Just as Cone has made
us aware of these musical frames that alter our perception of sound, he now presents us
with another enigma: is our perception influenced by this use of voice and if so how?
In the previous Berlioz/Ignace example it seems that though the music (notes,
rhythms, etc…) is the same, but the voice, soul, and personality of Berlioz do not shine
through in Ignace's work. Or perhaps Berlioz's voice is present but drowned out by
Ignace's loud and overbearing blasphemy. Cone also points out that a composer's voice is
not always present and that many times the composer has to assume a persona in order to
deliver an effective musical idea. These personae may come in the form of physical
characters (opera, musicals, film scores), story characters, or a narrator. In some works
the composer must don multiple personas and assume a variety of voices. Cone gives
some great examples, so why don't we go to the recital hall and listen?
On the program is Schubert's Erlkonig. You are familiar with the text and the
story that accompanies the music. The pianist and singer come to the stage and begin the
concert. So who is speaking? Is it Schubert? Perhaps, but only if Schubert himself is the
storyteller (and the text is by Goethe). More likely it is a narrator persona whom
Schubert speaks through. So is it Schubert or a narrator? As you contemplate this
dilemma Mr. Cone would like to boggle you further by reminding you that the story
14
contains characters as well. These characters may have a distinct voice of their own as
well. So now we have several voices to contend with.
Keep Your Voices Down!
The father, the son, and the Erlkonig are the characters. There is also a narrator at
the beginning and end that frames the text of the characters (yes, another one of those
blasted frames!). But Cone goes further to say that the narrator at the beginning may be a
different one than at the end. This means the possibility of two narrators, which Cone
describes as the interlocutor and responder. This presents the possibility of five voices-
and we haven't even mentioned the voice of the composer! Here are the possible
voicings according to Cone:
One Voice: Narrator, who quotes three characters.
Two Voices: Interlocutor and responder who quotes the three characters.
Four Voices: Narrator and three characters who speak for themselves.
Five Voices: Interlocutor, responder, and characters.
With all these voices shouting to be heard you realize that only one singer is on
the stage. Perhaps it is the simple answer: one voice. Yes that must be it. Besides,
what's the difference? The performance will undoubtedly be the same. But as you listen,
15
the singer's physical voice seems to take on the shape and semblance of the other
characters. The father's voice is deep and stern whereby the son's is notably younger,
lighter, but ultimately fearful of the dreaded supernatural villain that stalks him. The
Erlkonig's voice starts off sweetly as he tempts the boy with elven delights. But after he
is rejected, he becomes angry and shows his true voice as he rages "and if you are not
willing, then I will use force!"8
All of these emotions are portrayed throughout the performance. True, it could be
done without the inflections. In fact, multiple vocalists could have been used. But the
composer has stayed true to the poetic form and allowed the one singer to embody all of
the voices including that of the narrator(s). What then of Schubert? Has the composer
been silenced by his own music? Perhaps the composer's voice is defined by the way he
defines his persona(s). Then again, maybe the composer's voice is silent. Well, unless
you want to sit through another hour of pondering the "voice" in Schubert lieder, let's get
out of here. Besides, today your publisher is buying you lunch at T.G.I.M. Monday's.
It's my Birthday and I'll Cry if I Want to.
You walk into the restaurant and…. SURPRISE!!! Your co-workers greet you
with a rousing rendition of Happy Birthday to You. In your confusion of Cone's
confounded philosophical riddles you have forgotten your own birthday! You smile as
the voices ring out (mostly on key because your friends are musicians too) in celebrating
8 ibid. 5-8
16
another year. Wait, did I say voices? "No, not now!" you think. "Whose voice am I
hearing?" Suddenly the familiar tune, sung to you every year, has taken on a serious
mystery as to the voice.
Cone explains this as a functional song where the performer expresses himself as
a member of a specific community, engaged in performing a task or taking part in a
social ritual. The song Happy Birthday to You is a social ritual that is commonly
observed by society members. Everybody who sings it means it but they do not suppose
themselves to be the voice or persona of the composer's voice. So what voice if any do
we hear? Mildred J. Hill's (the composer's) voice does not reach out nor pretend to use
any persona. Cone points out that this type of music has no "voice" or poetic value, but is
used as a ritual symbol.9
The End Frame
Are we any better off than when we started? Perhaps Cone's ideas give
composers an idea on how their music may be perceived. Although pure factual
knowledge and empirical data cannot be derived from these philosophical ideas, one
becomes cognizant of the unseen forces that are at work. This may help composers and
listeners alike to be aware of the frames being imposed and what voice, if any to listen for
in a work. A composer that is aware of and can skillfully manipulate these invisible
9 ibid. p 49-50
17
factors can affect a listener's perception of their music. I'm afraid that this article is
over… I have to get back to work on my new piece: Symphony Fastastique No. 3.
18
Bibliography
Cluver, Claus. Musical Train Rides in the Classroom. Indiana Theory Review vol. 12.
Cone, Edward T. The Composer's Voice. Los Angeles: University of California Press,
1974.
Cone, Edward T. Musical Form and Musical Performance. New York: W. W. Norton
and Company, 1968.
Cope, David. New Directions in Music 7th
ed. Prospect Heights, Il: Waveland Press,
2001.